Franklin J. Schaffner

Franklin J. Schaffner, in full Franklin James Schaffner, (born May 30, 1920, Tokyo, Japan—died July 2, 1989, Santa Monica, California, U.S.), American director who worked on a number of well-regarded television programs before launching a successful film career that included such classics as Planet of the Apes (1968) and Patton (1970).

Schaffner, whose parents were Protestant missionaries, was raised in Japan until he was five years old, when his family returned to the United States. He attended Franklin & Marshall College in Pennsylvania (A.B., 1942) and then served as a lieutenant in the navy during World War II. In 1948 Schaffner began working for the CBS television network, and he went on to make important contributions to what became known as TV’s “golden age.” He made his directorial debut in 1949, helming episodes for the TV show Wesley. He later directed more than 150 live dramas for such notable anthology series as The Ford Theatre Hour, Playhouse 90, and Studio One in Hollywood. For the latter program, he made more than 100 shows, including Twelve Angry Men (1954), which earned him an Emmy Award. He also won Emmys for directing and cowriting The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial (1955), which aired on the Ford Star Jubilee, and for directing (1961–62) several episodes of the weekly series The Defenders.

Schaffner’s other notable television credits include Person to Person, a weekly show in which Edward R. Murrow interviewed various news makers; in the 1950s Schaffner helmed nearly 250 episodes of the program. In 1962 he directed A Tour of the White House, a TV documentary that featured Jacqueline Kennedy as the host; it received a Peabody Award. During that time he also directed (1960–61) Advise and Consent on Broadway.

In 1963 Schaffner helmed his first feature film, The Stripper (1963), which was based on William Inge’s play A Loss of Roses. Joanne Woodward starred as a struggling actress who accepts a job as a striptease performer, and Richard Beymer was cast as the wide-eyed teenager who is initially infatuated with her. The Best Man (1964) was a knowing dissection of political conventions and the bartering of power. That dramedy, which was based on the Gore Vidal play, featured Henry Fonda and Cliff Robertson as presidential candidates. Schaffner next directed The War Lord (1965), a medievaldrama starring Charlton Heston and Richard Boone. Less popular was The Double Man (1967), an espionage drama with Yul Brynner in a dual role as an American and an East German spy.

Schaffner’s first big commercial success was Planet of the Apes, which vies with Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey for the best science-fiction movie of 1968. The classic film, which combined action and social commentary, starred Heston as an astronaut who lands on a planet ruled by civilized apes. Immensely popular, the film spawned a number of sequels.

Schaffner’s gift for incorporating majestic scope and historical detail into his films was fully evident in Patton (1970), his most-lauded film. A box-office and critical hit, the biopic about Gen. George S. Patton received an Academy Award for best picture, and Schaffner earned an Oscar for his direction; George C. Scott was named best actor, but he declined the Oscar.

In 1971 Schaffner directed the opulent historical epic Nicholas and Alexandra, which centres on the end of the Romanov dynasty in Russia; the well-received drama was nominated for a best picture Academy Award. Even more popular was Papillon (1973), which was based on the autobiography of Henri Charrière, a French prisoner who escaped from Devils Island. Steve McQueen starred in the title role, and Dustin Hoffman portrayed a fellow prisoner. Although considered overly long, the drama was a critical and commercial success. Islands in the Stream (1977) was an ambitious though largely unsuccessful attempt to render Ernest Hemingway’s posthumously published collection of three novellas into a cohesive film.

Better received was The Boys from Brazil (1978), a thriller based on the Ira Levinbest seller. Laurence Olivier gave an Oscar-nominated performance as a Nazi-hunting Jewish survivor of the death camps, and Gregory Peck was cast against type as Josef Mengele, trying to clone Adolf Hitler. Schaffner’s later films, however, were largely forgettable. Yes, Giorgio (1982), which featured Luciano Pavarotti in his big-screen debut, was widely panned. Lionheart (1987), an offbeat Crusades adventure with Eric Stolz and Gabriel Byrne, was given only a limited release, and moviegoers largely ignored Welcome Home (1989), a drama about a soldier (Kris Kristofferson) who is mistakenly thought to have been killed during the Vietnam War. Schaffner died of lung cancer shortly before the latter film’s release.